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Forbes India, in association
with BNP Paribas, conducted the second session of the second season of Forbes
India Conversations. This latest edition convened some of the country's top
technology evangelists to share their views on a 'CEO's mandate in the age of
intelligent automation'.

Brian Carvalho: How
imperative is AI in business today?
Rostow Ravanan: AI will
fundamentally rewrite the business of IT services and disrupt how we take the
offerings to the market. It is equivalent to the invention of the IC (internal
combustion) engine, which disrupted the horse-cart industry.
Rahul Agarwal: By definition, it is difficult to predict what AI can give
you. But AI is making us more efficient and bringing us closer to the customer.

Abhishek Ganguly: In my industry, AI is used in making product designs
based on consumer trends and to predict future fashion trends.Subram Natarajan: One of the advantages that I have is to see how
different industries are consuming AI. Today if you were to communicate with
any of the banks through digital channels, nine out of 10 times you will be
touching an AI algorithm.

Kamal Bali: Automation and AI are creating new revenue streams in the
auto industry. In five years, we will not be able to recognise how we are doing
things now. We actually demonstrated a fully electric, fully connected,
driverless truck about two weeks ago.

Sameer Garde: AI isn't a solution, but a tool. It is a feature and one
element of the business problem. But what are the key things that will
influence its adoption? One is technical feasibility, like quantum on the
cloud, which makes it more accessible.

Nivruti Rai: Tomorrow, AI will be like how each one of us use
[Microsoft] Excel today. We have AI in our buildings, in processors, in
identifying fake parts, we are using AI everywhere. By March this year, I'll
have 14,000-odd Intel India employees trained on Level 1 AI and my goal is to
identify more people to do Level 2 and Level 3.

Franciska Decuypere:For a bank, the potential of using AI is tremendous.
Where I am a little less optimistic is that it is not easy to apply
applications and make them relevant to clients. Before you use them at scale –
and there is a business scale – there is a lot of homework to do.

Carvalho: Clearly there is a business case for AI, but what has been its
return on investment?
Agarwal: Our after-sales
service cost has gone down by 40% over the last four years, as a lot of it is
being driven by AI solutions. Even our supply chain is becoming more efficient
every year.

Bali: For trucks and buses, with the use of AI we aim to reduce the
logistics cost by 50%. Furthermore, IC engine-driven vehicles using machine
learning and AI could lower fuel costs by at least 20%.

Ganguly: AI makes you more agile, so I think part of it is not
measurable. Any company which doesn't value that is probably on the wrong path.

Carvalho: Data is the fuel that AI runs on. How do you collect that and
discover sources for it?
Ravanan: Today, as so
many touch points have become digital, the ability to capture data has
increased exponentially.

Natarajan: The key is the quality of the data, cleaning it and ensuring
that it is right and important.

Rai: Data can be used for AI and machine learning only with context. I
believe AI is one technology where India can fully leverage its people. There
are lakhs [1] of engineers graduating each year. I believe that with training,
they can be turned into data scientists. There are people who know maths and
statistics, but data analysis, the way AI needs it, requires training.

Bali: In the automotive industry we have a challenge in finding people.
But I agree with Nivruti...their talent can develop over a period of time. Right
now, however, there is a challenge.

Natarajan: Technology is helping skill data scientists and get them off
the block quickly.

Decuypere:If we want to make AI relevant to the consumer, it should
be based on as much data as possible. But since you could be in
conflict with privacy concerns of customers, there is a lot of educational
explanation that needs to be done.

[1] A lakh is a unit in the
Indian numbering system equal to one hundred thousand.

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